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  20. <h1>Enable Wake On LAN on Proxmox/Debian</h1>
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  24. <p>Wake on LAN is very useful functionality if your hardware supports it. Here is a good tutorial on the steps required to enable WOL on a device. This typically needs to be enabled in the BIOS first and the steps below will enable it in Linux <a href="https://www.lifewire.com/wake-on-lan-4149800" target="_blank">https://www.lifewire.com/wake-on-lan-4149800</a></p>
  25. <ol>
  26. <li>After enabling WOL in the BIOS, boot into Linux and login</li>
  27. <li>Run the following commands in a terminal window
  28. <div class="codeBlock"># install ethtool<br />
  29. sudo apt install ethtool -y<br />
  30. # list network devices<br />
  31. ip addr</div>
  32. </li>
  33. <li>Look for the device that has a local IP address (192.168 or 10.10)</li>
  34. <li>Note the device name and the MAC address for use later when sending the magic packet</li>
  35. <li>Continue with the following commands to check if the device supports WOL
  36. <div class="codeBlock"># replace eno1 with the device name to test<br />
  37. sudo ethtool eno1</div>
  38. </li>
  39. <li>Find the Supports Wake-on line</li>
  40. <li>If it contains a g it supports WOL, continue with the following commands
  41. <div class="codeBlock"># enable wol on the device<br />
  42. sudo ethtool -s eno1 wol g<br />
  43. # edit the network interfaces configuration<br />
  44. sudo nano /etc/network/interfaces</div>
  45. </li>
  46. <li>Paste the following below the iface line for the network device
  47. <p>ethernet-wol g</p>
  48. </li>
  49. <li>Press CTRL+O, Enter, CTRL+X to write the changes</li>
  50. <li>Shutdown the device</li>
  51. <li>Test to see if WOL is working by sending a magic packet</li>
  52. <li>If everything is setup correctly the device should awaken from it&#39;s slumber and boot up</li>
  53. <li>Log back into the device and run the following command to verify the Wake-on value has updated to g on boot
  54. <div class="codeBlock"># replace eno1 with the device name to test<br />
  55. sudo ethtool eno1</div>
  56. </li>
  57. </ol>
  58. <p><em>NOTE: If the WOL flag doesn&#39;t stick with the configuration above, replace the &quot;ethernet-wol g&quot; value in /etc/network/interfaces with &quot;post-up /usr/sbin/ethtool -s eno1 wol g&quot;, replacing eno1 with the name of the interface.</em></p>
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